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Who pays for health care in Asia?

Authors :
O'Donnell O
van Doorslaer E
Rannan-Eliya RP
Somanathan A
Adhikari SR
Akkazieva B
Harbianto D
Garg CC
Hanvoravongchai P
Herrin AN
Huq MN
Ibragimova S
Karan A
Kwon SM
Leung GM
Lu JF
Ohkusa Y
Pande BR
Racelis R
Tin K
Tisayaticom K
Trisnantoro L
Wan Q
Yang BM
Zhao Y
Source :
Journal of health economics [J Health Econ] 2008 Mar; Vol. 27 (2), pp. 460-75. Date of Electronic Publication: 2007 Nov 29.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

We estimate the distributional incidence of health care financing in 13 Asian territories that account for 55% of the Asian population. In all territories, higher-income households contribute more to the financing of health care. The better-off contribute more as a proportion of ability to pay in most low- and lower-middle-income territories. Health care financing is slightly regressive in three high-income economies with universal social insurance. Direct taxation is the most progressive source of finance and is most so in poorer economies. In universal systems, social insurance is proportional to regressive. In high-income economies, the out-of-pocket (OOP) payments are proportional or regressive while in low-income economies the better-off spend relatively more OOP. But in most low-/middle-income countries, the better-off not only pay more, they also get more health care.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0167-6296
Volume :
27
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of health economics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18179832
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhealeco.2007.08.005